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Caribbean beats and sings in the island
of the Son
''In the Caribbean before
the verb was the tambour, the rhythm and the movement''
(Angel Quintero Rivera)
The Caribbean, more than a geographical zone, has been shaped as
a concept created by an identity in which music plays, undoubtely,
a role of integration. Its peoples have common roots and similar
histories in a way that many people consider the term tropical
music includes the whole sound spectrum of this area which
ramifies its characteristics to different areas linked at the same
time with those of linguistic character: Spanish, French, English
and Dutch.
In this way, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Bahamas, Trinidad
and Tobago, Belize, Jamaica, haiti, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Aruba,
Guyana, among others are part of the ethnic mosaic distinguishing
this region. The Caribbean character (understood as wide range of
expression embracing traditions, social behaviours, linguistic,
historical and musical links) can be apply to certain towns in Mexico,
Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Honduras, Guatemala
and in the Latin American Diaspora in the united States, especially
in New York. Thus, places so distant as Brazil can be considered
as part of this identity where similar roots and cultural religious
or carnival expressions in which the samba represents the
African heritage just as happens in Cuba, Haiti, Trinidad, Jamaica
and Bahamas.
In each country the African and European contributions differ in
a considerable way depending on the intensity of the slave trade,
immigration, type of economy, system of colonial government and
of course, the way of grasping the expressive elements. However,
facing common problems and claims, all Caribbean music from the
''Lamento Jibaro'' by Puerto Rican Rafael Hernández to ''Dem
belly full but we hungry'' by Bob Marley in Jamaica, express frustrations
of plundered towns and slums inhabitant's life.
In this area complex musical creole process gradually took place
from 16th century where musical genres like Trinitarian Calypso,
the Jamaican reggae, the Martinique biguine,
the bomba, the plena and the seis from
Puerto Rico, the cumbia and the vallenato from
Colombia, the joropo from Venezuela, the Brazilian samba,
the Dominican Bachata and merengue, the Cuban
rumba and son as well as other more local manifestations
like the aguinaldo, the soca, the mento,
the tamborito or the zouk have acquired a strong
Caribbean affirmation. Their diverse components have developed among
themselves and continue influencing each other thanks to the migrations
and different interchanges that have favored the Cuba's link with
the Caribbean.
One of the most representative examples of this constant musical
flow is the Caribbean_New Yorker salsa, a heterogeneous
sound nourished by many traditional genres where the roots of our
son are certainly recognized. Salsa has had its main manifestations
in Cuba, Puerto Rico, Panama, Venezuela, Colombia and it has found
in the city of New York a convergent point tom consolidate it and
it contributes to its world difussion. Singers like Rubén
Blades, Gilberto Santa Rosa,, Andy Montañez, Oscar D' León
and music groups like La Sonora Ponceña, Dimensión
Latina, guaco, Niche or the percussionist Tito Puentes known as
El Rey del Timbal highlights among its main interpreters.
Cuban dance music has found in the songo, the salsa
and in the contemporaneous timba, the historical continiuty of the
son, an agglutinating genre that together with the rumba
has become a source of inspiration for other artistic expressions.
This music genre together with the Caribbean will be honored in
this 8th edition of the International Fair CUBADISCO 2004.
Nerys González Bello and Liliana Casanella Cué.
Musicologists.
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